Italian Bank Loans Plunge By Record; Lenders Say "No Cause For Alarm"

While Italian bank and sovereign bond markets have showed a little weakness in recent weeks, they remain largely in limbo - supported on one side by an inexorable promise by ECB's Draghi outweighing the crushing reality of economic fundamentals. The transmission mechanism, claimed to 'fixed' by Draghi, is simply not. In fact, as the ABI notes, loans to families and companies dropped by record amounts in January. As ANSA reports, the continuing recession is not only weighing on loan demand but banks are unwilling to lend their ECB-funded reserves as delinquent loans continue to surge year after year (at record highs up over 16% YoY). Deposits rose - theoretically a positive - and yet as we have noted this is a preference for liquidity not a signal of confidence in Italian banks. However, all this terrible news, weakening economic climate, and plunging credit creation is described by the Banking Association as "no cause for alarm." Phew...

Italian bad loans soaring...

Via ANSA.It,

Loans to families and companies dropped by record amounts in January, Italy's banking association ABI reported Tuesday, adding that it expected the country's economy to contract even more than it previously forecast.

According to ABI the value of total loans issued, 1.467 billion euros, represented a 2.5% drop on the December value and was largely the result of the continuing recession in Italy.

Meanwhile, for the current year ABI researchers said their forecasts of a 0.6% contraction in the economy would likely be revised for the worse after a higher than expected contraction of 0.9% in the fourth quarter of 2012. On this basis, and unless the government takes any measures to stimulate growth, the economy could be on track to shrink by about 1%, ABI said.

The banking association also warned of the increasing amount of potentially dud loans in the financial system - another result of the continuing poor economic climate in Italy - but added there was no cause for alarm, as the increase was "physiological" and "could be managed".

According to ABI, the total value of bad loans reached a net value of some 64.3 billion euros at end 2012, representing about 3.3% of total bank lending, up from about 2.7% to the end of 2011.

Meanwhile, ABI said that bank deposits continued to increase in January, up 6.8% on December, reaching some 1.2 trillion euros.

The January growth rate marked an acceleration with respect to December's +6.2% reading.

ABI said the increase in bank deposits is likely a result of consumers' preference for liquidity in the current recessionary climate.

I'mn utterly blown away how the bad news is now coming in waves - not one or two. Based on this - the Crash will begin with not One but a multiple of Black Swans -all in either resulting from eaach other or within short term closely linked time frames...

They have no choice but to lie at this point. The powers that be are just buying time, building up ammo surpluses, portable roadblocks and coffins to handle the coming chaos. Time to formulate the plan to take over the local Costco.

when you put money on a bank account you get a negative real interest rate when not simply negative ... and yet the sheeple are depositing massively because they are scared of ... damn ! the bank crisis !